Seok-woo, a divorced man, is always caught up at work, which leaves him no time to spare with his daughter Su-an. She decides to take the train to Busan by herself to see her mom and Seok-woo is pushed to accompany her. As the train departs, an abnormal virus breaks out from an infected girl and people start to transform into zombies. Will Seok-woo and Su-an make it out alive?

“Train to Busan” has won the Technical Award at the Korean Association of Film Critics Awards, Best New Director Award and Best Supporting Actor Award at Baeksang Arts Awards, the Audience Choice Award for Most Popular Film at the Blue Dragon Film Awards, Best Supporting Actor Award and Film Arts Award at Buil Film Awards and Best Foreign Language Film at Fangoria Chainsaw Awards. The movie was screened at Cannes International Film Festival in 2016.

What would you do if you wake up with a new face every day? Woo-jin, a man who designs furniture for a living, is used to this: he is sometimes an elderly man, a little boy, a chubby woman, or a foreigner. The only people who know of his supernatural situation are his mother and his best friend.

One day, he meets Yi-su, a girl who works for a furniture store, and instantly falls in love with her. Since his physical identity changes frequently, he continues to visit her daily, acting as a customer that she has never seen before. Woo-jin finally musters up the courage to talk to her and ask her out. As their perfect date passes by, will his attempts to stay awake succeed knowing that his face will change once he falls asleep?

The movie has received Best New Director Award at the Grand Bell Awards and Best Editing Award at Blue Dragon Film Awards.

Set in the late 1920s, “The Age of Shadows” follows the cat-and-mouse game that unfolds between a group of resistance fighters trying to bring in explosives from Shanghai to destroy key Japanese facilities in Seoul, and Japanese agents trying to stop them. A talented Korean-born Japanese police officer, who was previously in the independence movement himself, is thrown into a dilemma between the demands of his reality and the instinct to support a greater cause.

The film has won several awards including: the Asian Film Award for Best Composing, Best Picture at Austin Fantastic Fest, Best Director and Best Actor Baek Sang Art Awards, Best Supporting Actor and Best Art Direction at Grand Bell Awards, KOFRA Film Award for Best Actor, Top Supporting Actor Award at the Korean Film Actor's Association Awards. It has also participated in Venice Film Festival and Toronto International Film Festival.